The following
quotations are from a person with vast multimedia experience.

"I'd suspect that if I put it to the test I'd find
that K-Lite, for example, had done more damage (as measured by crash
reports) than some notable percentage of actual outright malware."

"At one point 7 of the top 10
crashes in multimedia on Windows lead squarely to problems induced
by K-Lite."

"...the fact remains that they
(K-Lite) have been one of the most toxic projects ever released for
Windows in any form."

The above quotations encapsulate what prompted me to produce
my own codec packs.

Things the Shark pack does that other packs cannot do . . .

1. Full color thumbnails including FLV's and 10bit
MKV's.
(also allows users to select at what point by percentage to grab the
thumbnail)2. Enable the Preview Pane for ALL newly enabled
filetypes such as MKV and FLV.3. Explorer properties are displayed for non native
filetypes such as MKV and FLV4. Updated often - and has update notification
builtin5. Allow use of the PowerDVD decoders for 32bit
LiveTV in Media Center.6.
Support playback of MKV files on Extenders and
on the Xbox One.7. Support use of the LAV filters with the Play To function for MKV files.
8. Support playback of MOD audio files and M4A
files containing ALAC9. Supports playlist creation for use in Media
Center10. Allow users to Enable/Disable codecs installed
on their system11. Functionality such as Win7DSFilterTweaker
builtin.12. Support 'Add to Windows Media Player List'
using rightclick on all files such as MKV.

If you decide to choose the x64 version of Windows Media Player as your
default player,
Windows Explorer will automatically differentiate between the 2 media
players as depicted below.

The Settings Application is 100% UAC compliant.Restricted access is enforced. (User Account
Control)
The Application allows each user to maintain individual codec settings while at
the same time seamlessly integrating any administrative commands directly
into the users account. New users accounts are detected upon opening the
Application and automatically inherit the Administrators settings.

Adding files to the Windows
Media Player Playlist

On the Help TAB of the Settings Application is a
button to allow you to choose Windows Media Player Filetype
Associations. This buttons functionality is
GLOBAL and is not restricted to the 32bit environment. Once you have
used this button, you can Enqueue newly associated filetypes to the Windows
Media Player Playlist as depicted below. It also sets up Media Center to
utilize the associations for seamless playback in that player also. If for
some reason this doesn't work for you, go back to the associations button,
click No twice, consecutively, then select Yes. No reboot is required.